This Hebrew alphabet contains the Hooked X symbol for "aleph" and is from an old Icelandic manuscript that dates to between 1700-1890.
This secret coded alphabet contains an unmistakable Hooked X symbol for the letter "a." It's one of several hundred alphabets from old Icelandic manuscripts that date between 1750-1850.
This alphabet from 1780 contains yet another apparent Hooked X symbol for "a."
These are only nine of at least one hundred and twenty examples of the "X" symbol being used for the letter "a." Below is the only example I had previously seen of the "X" symbol used for "a" in a secret coded alphabet from a 15th Century Cistercian Germanic manuscript I published in my "Hooked X" book in 2009.
Two examples of complicated sigil drawings from the Icelandic manuscripts that incorporate runes and Masonic box code symbols (left), and a heavily Christian influenced drawing (right) that were both used for witchcraft and ritual magic.
These sigil drawings incorporate heavy Masonic symbolism (left) and what appear to be two Hooked X symbols in the upper right part of the upper arm (right).
One of the two Larsson Papers, dated to 1883 and 1885, using the same pentadic numbering system as found on the Kensington Rune Stone, which also contains two runic alphabets written in the "Secret Style." These alphabets which include the Hooked X for "a", along with the alphabetic box code were clearly Masonic and prove the Larsson Papers are related to both known medieval Cistercian secret coded alphabets and the recently published Icelandic secret alphabets that lean heavily on ancient runes.
These two examples of the Hooked X are found in medieval Icelandic manuscripts from 14th (Right, 1300-1400) and 15th Centuries (Left, 1490-1510).
This circa 6th century Anglo-Saxon brooch with eight symbols carved into the outer ring include a Hooked X at the 2:00 o'clock position. It was excavated next to a skull in Old Hunstanton, in Norfolk, England in 1900.
Little did I realize that while on my trip to Rhode Island
for the dedication of the new home for the Narragansett Rune Stone, I was just
being introduced to the tip of an important iceberg of new information that is
going to rock the skeptics, debunkers, and disbelievers of the five North
American rune stones with the Hooked X, to their core. Before the ceremony
started, Steve DiMarzo and Valdimar Samuelsson visited briefly with me concerning a
recently discovered cache of Icelandic manuscripts dating back to the tenth
Century that contained literally hundreds of secret coded alphabets, many
using unique and mysterious runes. Since the dedication, Steve, with his dogged determination has been
scouring every page of every manuscript, and Valdimar, with his historical
knowledge of the use of runes in Iceland, and ability to read the Icelandic
text, has led to several important discoveries. As of this past weekend,
Steve has already found 120 examples of secret alphabets that use the “X”
symbol for “a”, as well as all the runes on the Narragansett Rune Stone.
A couple
days after initially posting this blog, I received additional information from Valdimar
after he had researched the history of the use of runes in Iceland. He then sent me the following:
"Scott,
after reading on runes, especially from the book ‘’Galdrar á Íslandi‘‘,
chapter ‘‘Rúnir og rúnagaldrar‘‘, by Matthías Viðar Sæmundsson, he says:
Scholars have denied that use of runic letters in Iceland were used as much as
Björn M Olsen claimed. Olsen (14 July 1850 – 16 January 1919) was an Icelandic
scholar and politician. If he is right,
then Runic letters have been used from the time of early settlement, around
870, to what we call brennuöld 1674 when they burned people with runic
knowledge. In 1641 another scholar
‚‘‘Jon The Learned‘‘, said that many runic books had been in use before our
famed Snorri Sturluson (1179 – 23 September 1241). He wrote most of our Icelandic sagas some
believe from old rune books. Based on
this, it is only the mainland European academics, both then and today, who deny
that Iceland had, in fact, used runes even longer than written in this
book. Now we see evidence today this is
true with all these manuscripts dated after those claims mentioned here."
This is important new information as it shows the ongoing attempts by scholars to stubbornly maintain an untenable position about not only the continued use of runes (and the Hooked X) which began in at least the 9th Century, by individuals and secret societies not only in Iceland, but no doubt in mainland Scandinavia and other parts of Europe.
A couple
days after initially posting this blog, I received additional information from Valdimar
after he had researched the history of the use of runes in Iceland. He then sent me the following:
"Scott,
after reading on runes, especially from the book ‘’Galdrar á Íslandi‘‘,
chapter ‘‘Rúnir og rúnagaldrar‘‘, by Matthías Viðar Sæmundsson, he says:
Scholars have denied that use of runic letters in Iceland were used as much as
Björn M Olsen claimed. Olsen (14 July 1850 – 16 January 1919) was an Icelandic
scholar and politician. If he is right,
then Runic letters have been used from the time of early settlement, around
870, to what we call brennuöld 1674 when they burned people with runic
knowledge. In 1641 another scholar
‚‘‘Jon The Learned‘‘, said that many runic books had been in use before our
famed Snorri Sturluson (1179 – 23 September 1241). He wrote most of our Icelandic sagas some
believe from old rune books. Based on
this, it is only the mainland European academics, both then and today, who deny
that Iceland had, in fact, used runes even longer than written in this
book. Now we see evidence today this is
true with all these manuscripts dated after those claims mentioned here."
This is important new information as it shows the ongoing attempts by scholars to stubbornly maintain an untenable position about not only the continued use of runes (and the Hooked X) which began in at least the 9th Century, by individuals and secret societies not only in Iceland, but no doubt in mainland Scandinavia and other parts of Europe.